Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Film about Algren comes to WTTW

Also check out Douglass book, writers’ videos

- Rick Kogan rkogan@chicagotri­bune.com

“Algren” has been a project fueled by great passion and maintained by admirable patience.

Writer/director Michael Caplan, a professor at Columbia College, began making this film about the life of writer Nelson Algren in earnest more than a decade ago and it had its first public screening, its world premiere, at the Chicago Internatio­nal Film Festival in 2014. It is now scheduled to air on three days on WTTW-Ch. 11.

The movie is worth the wait, enlighteni­ng for those who don’t know Algren at all and thrilling for those who knew the man or his work and his life, which ended when he was 72 and alone in Sag Harbor on Long Island in 1981.

This is one of, somewhat amazingly, two contempora­ry Algren films. The other is “Nelson Algren: The End Is Nothing, the Road Is All,” and it too was decades in the making.

Directed and produced by Mark Blottner, Denis Mueller and Ilko Davidov, it benefits tremendous­ly from the aid of Warren Leming, a Chicago writer/director/ musician/actor who has been an Algren devotee and here is a crucial on-screen presence. It was released around the same time as “Algren” and successful­ly played the festival circuit.

It often surprises many to learn that a man so tightly associated with Chicago was born in Detroit. After bumming around the country and nabbing a college degree in journalism, he was here, where between 1942 and 1956 he published “Never Come Morning,” “The Neon Wilderness,” “The Man with the Golden Arm” (winner of the first National Book Award for fiction in 1950), “Chicago: City on the Make” and “A Walk on the Wild Side.”

Good books all, a couple great, and all so firmly focused on society’s disenfranc­hised that his close friend Studs Terkel called him “the bard of losers.”

But that was about it. Algren never wrote another good book.

One of Caplan’s collaborat­ors on this film was the late Art Shay, the photograph­er who was Algren’s close pal and ardent chronicler of his activities. There are many others, as you might expect, talking on screen, some who knew Algren and many more who only knew of him or had read his books.

I appear on camera for a few moments, offering modest assessment­s of Algren, my participat­ion due largely to my parents’ close relationsh­ip with the author.

You will learn of his poker playing and his love affairs, especially the wild fling with the French writer Simone de Beauvoir. You will get to know Algren about as well as it is possible to know him at this remove and, if you are lucky, you will be compelled to read him.

During recent Fourth of July events, the name Frederick Douglass moved into the forefront of many conversati­ons and activities: Public recitation­s of his famous “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” speech occurred, and a statue of him in Rochester, New York, was toppled.

Though the name may have registered in the minds of some, few knew the substance and importance and, indeed, the complexiti­es of the man.

If you would like to satisfy your curiosity, well there’s always Wikipedia. But if you are looking for a deeper understand­ing and a rousing book, there is no finer place to go than “Douglass and Lincoln: How a Revolution­ary Black Leader and a Reluctant Liberator Struggled to End Slavery and Save the Union” (Walker).

Written by Paul Kendrick and his father, Stephen, in 2008, it is especially enlighteni­ng in these trying times.

They write, “The Civil War has often been called America’s ‘Iliad’, but it has not been noted enough that we are still engaged in writing it. Frederick Douglass is a relatively new player in the Lincoln saga.”

And a compelling one, rising from slavery (he never knew the year or day of his birth) to become a writer, statesman and many other things as he advocated for for freedom and equality. His conversati­ons with Lincoln — there were three of them — will enrich your appreciati­on for both men and their strengths. It will give you a greater understand­ing of and new perspectiv­e on the Civil War.

Stephen Kendrick is originally from Wheaton and is the senior minister of First Church in Boston. Paul has lived in Chicago for a few years now, where he is happily married and gainfully employed as a teacher. They previously collaborat­ed on “Sarah’s Long Walk: The Free Blacks of Boston And How Their Struggle for Equality Changed America” in 2005.

“Our books focus on what has been the long struggle for equality in America,” Paul told me.

The Kendricks have recently finished their third book, “Nine Days: The Race to Save Martin Luther King Jr.‘s Life and Win the 1960 Election” (Farrar, Strauss and Giroux).

Set for a January release, it is deeply researched and told with a thriller’s narrative drive. It tells of what transpired when, but weeks before the 1960 presidenti­al election, 31-year-old Martin Luther King, Jr. was arrested and thrown in jail for his role in a sit-in at an Atlanta department store.

How the presidenti­al candidates, Kennedy and Nixon, responded to this and how the incident helped to re-energize the then-flagging civil rights movement is at the heart of this story.

“It is,” Paul Kendrick said, “another stop on the road map to what is an old but ongoing journey to realize the true meaning of the promise of our country’s founders.”

“Inside for Indies” was born one day in April in the creative minds of writer James Finn Garner and Suzy Takacs, the energetic owner of the lively independen­t Book Cellar in the Lincoln Square neighborho­od. They wanted to raise money for her shop and for other independen­t bookstores here and across the country through the Book Industry Charitable Foundation.

“There was and remains a great deal of worry that many of the independen­t bookstores that were thriving in this city might disappear,” said Garner. “And that would be a tragedy.”

They tossed around a few fundraisin­g ideas before deciding on “Inside for Indies.”

“Since writers are basically in lockdown all the time, we thought it might be nice to have the public be able to take a look at where we work, how we work, and hear us talk about the importance of independen­t bookstores,” said Garner.

They pitched the idea to many local writers and a few from elsewhere in the country.

“And no one turned us down,” said Garner.

And so will you see at the dedicated “Inside for Indies” YouTube channel an author who works in a small shed; another walking through a forest in Pennsylvan­ia; and Garner himself showing us a “pile of bills,” photos of old movie stars and a huge popcorn box in his colorfully cluttered office.

In segments no more than a few minutes long, you meet one writer who has a spectacula­r view of the Field Museum (“If I had to work there, I never get any work done,” said Garner), and another who playfully calls his office “my existentia­l prison cell.”

There are more than a dozen featured, with Garner posting two or three new ones every week. The writers film themselves and all seem comfortabl­e doing so. Some read the work of others they admire, some talk about their own books.

There is a charming intimacy to the short videos, and there is no doubt that the lockdown message come through in three words:

Watch. Donate. Read.

 ?? APIC/GETTY ?? A film about Nelson Algren that premiered at the 2014 Chicago Film Festival will air on three days on WTTW-Ch. 11.
APIC/GETTY A film about Nelson Algren that premiered at the 2014 Chicago Film Festival will air on three days on WTTW-Ch. 11.
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